receptacle

Definitions

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition

n. A container that holds items or matter.

n. Botany The expanded tip of a flower stalk or axis that bears the floral organs or the group of flowers in a head.

n. Electronics A fitting connected to a power supply and equipped to receive a plug.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

n. A container.

n. The part of the flower stalk (peduncle or pedicel) to which the floral parts are attached; also torus.

n. A contact device installed at an outlet for the connection of an attachment plug and flexible cord to supply portable equipment or appliances.

from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English

n. That which serves, or is used, for receiving and containing something, as for examople, a basket, a vase, a bag, a reservoir; a repository.

n.

n. The apex of the flower stalk, from which the organs of the flower grow, or into which they are inserted. See Illust. of Flower, and Ovary.

n. The dilated apex of a pedicel which serves as a common support to a head of flowers.

n. An intercellular cavity containing oil or resin or other matters.

n. A special branch which bears the fructification in many cryptogamous plants.

from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

n. That which receives or holds anything for rest or deposit; a storing-place; a repository; a container; any space, open or closed, that serves for reception and keeping.

n. In botany:

n. In a single flower, the more or less enlarged and peculiarly developed apex of the peduncle or pedicel, upon which all the organs of the flower are directly or indirectly borne: the Linnæan and usual name: same as the more specific and proper torus of De Candolle and the thalamus of Tournefort.

n. In an inflorescence, the axis or rachis of a head or other short dense cluster; most often. the expanded disk-like summit of the peduncle in Compositæ (dandelion, etc.) on which are borne the florets of the head, surrounded by an involucre of bracts; a clinanthium. In contrast with the above, sometimes called common receptacle.

n. In an ovary, same as placenta. 4.

n. Among cryptogams

n. In the vascular class, the placenta.

n. In Marchantiaceæ, one of the umbrella-like branches of the thallus, upon which the reproductive organs are borne.

n. In Fucaceæ, a part of the thallus in which conceptacles (see conceptacle) are congregated. They are either terminal portions of branches or parts sustained above water by air-bladders.

n. In Fungi, sometimes same as stroma; in Ascomycetes, same as pycnidium, 1 (also the stalk of a discocarp); in Phalloideæ, the inner part of the sporophore, supporting the gleba.

n. In lichens, the cup containing the soredia. The term has some other analogous applications.

n. In zoology and anatomy, a part or an organ which receives and contains or detains a secretion; a receptaculum: as, the gall-bladder is the receptacle of the bile.

_Beneath all_ SENSIBLE _phenomena there is an unchangeable subject-matter, the mysterious substratum of the world of sense, which he calls the receptacle (ἱποδοχή) the nurse (τιθήνη) of all that is produced_. [